Iraqi Lawyer Who Helped Save Jessica Lynch Accepts Job in U.S.

WASHINGTON – The Iraqi lawyer who led U.S. forces to former POW Jessica Lynch (search) has accepted a job offer from Washington lobbying firm The Livingston Group days after the United States granted him asylum.

The company, founded by former U.S. Rep. Bob Livingston, said details on 33-year-old Mohammed Odeh al-Rehaief's (search) new responsibilities were still in the works. A good deal of The Livingston Group's business is international, the company said, and some clients are from Arabic-speaking countries. The company also said al-Rehaief is eager to improve his English, and will take intense language lessons.

But before al-Rehaief can start his new job he will undergo surgery next week, Fox News has learned. Al-Rehaief was injured during several risky treks up and down a road that came to be known as "ambush alley," in an effort to transport information on the Nasiriyah hospital were Pfc. Lynch was held to U.S. Marines stationed outside the city.

A surgeon has volunteered to perform the operation at no cost, Fox News has also learned.

Al-Rehaief, who has not yet been reunited with the 19-year-old Army supply clerk he helped rescue, arrived in the United States with his wife and 5-year-old child in early April after the Department of Homeland Security granted them "humanitarian parole."

Al-Rehaief was granted asylum (search) Monday in Arlington, Va., by the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services. He is now allowed to work in this country, and can stay in the United States indefinitely and can eventually apply for U.S. citizenship.

While humanitarian parole is not common, Homeland Security spokesman Bill Strassberger said Tuesday it can be awarded for any urgent humanitarian reason. It is most often used for foreigners in need of emergency medical treatment.

"Although the military is in control of Iraq, the situation was not stabilized over there to the extent we could assure his and his family's safety," Strassberger said. "We felt there definitely was grounds to provide additional assistance for what he was able to do to help Jessica Lynch."

Al-Rehaief was previously referred to only as "Mohammed" in order to protect the safety of himself and his family while they were still in Iraq.

"Mr. al-Rehaief should know Americans are grateful for his bravery and for his compassion," Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said Tuesday when the asylum grant was announced.

Al-Rehaief is considered a hero by many Americans and the U.S. military for making a series of trips between Saddam Hospital in Nasiriyah, where Lynch was being held, and U.S. forces several miles away. He had to walk through dangerous enemy territory each time he made the trek.

He was among several sources who helped the CIA and the military find Lynch, a 19-year-old West Virginian who was rescued in a commando raid on April 2.

Al-Rehaief, whose wife worked in the hospital, told U.S. Marines he saw Lynch being slapped by a security guard there.

To confirm her location, officials with the Defense Intelligence Agency (search), the military counterpart of the CIA, equipped and trained an Iraqi informant with a concealed video camera. On the day of the raid, the informant walked around the hospital, videotaping entrances and a route to Lynch's room.

Knowledgeable sources told Fox News that this specific informant was paid for his services and that he is still in Iraq.

That night, a team of U.S. Navy SEALs, Army Rangers and other commandos helicoptered to the hospital while troops engaged Iraqi soldiers in another part of the city. Rescuers entered the hospital and persuaded an Iraqi doctor to lead them to Lynch.

After Lynch was rescued, al-Rehaief, 33, and his family stayed at a refugee camp in Iraq until U.S. officials worked out a way for him to come to the United States, Strassberger said. The family arrived in the Washington area on April 10.

Lynch, of Palestine, W.Va., worked as a supply clerk with the Army's 507th Maintenance Co. Her unit was ambushed near Nasiriyah after making a wrong turn on March 23, during early fighting in the invasion of Iraq. Several members of her unit were killed; she was among six who were captured.

Lynch, more badly wounded than the other survivors, was left in the hospital. The five other prisoners of war from her unit were later rescued north of Baghdad. All have since been returned to the U.S.

Lynch suffered a head wound, spinal injury and fractures to her right arm, both legs and her right foot and ankle. She is being treated at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.

James Thibeault of West Virginia founded Friends of Mohammad, an organization based in Lynch's hometown of Palestine. The group wants to bring al-Rehaief to West Virginia to thank him.

"There's a wonderful spiritual connection there for the Muslim people," said Thibeault, who hopes a Lynch family member will sit on the group's board.

Lynch's father said recently that that if he ever meets the lawyer, "he would get a world of hugs out of that heroic deal."

"I am truly grateful," Greg Lynch told NBC's Today show. "I realize he risked his own life to do this. The man is an angel and a god in his own ways."

Fox News' Rita Cosby and The Associated Press contributed to this report.